Maxwell announces new chair appointments

The Maxwell School at Syracuse University is pleased to
announce the following appointments:

Douglas
Armstrong, Professor and Chair, Anthropology

Douglas V. Armstrong is a Maxwell Professor of Teaching
Excellence and a Laura
J. and L. Douglas Meredith Professor for Teaching Excellence. He
holds a PhD from the University of California, Los Angeles and specializes in
global historical archaeology, archaeology of the African diaspora, the
Atlantic world, ethnohistory, colonialism, ethnogenesis, culture contact and
culture change, GIS, public policy, and world heritage archaeology. Armstrong
is currently engaged in research in the Caribbean and in New York State. In Barbados, his current research
explores the shift from small-scale farming to large-scale agro-industrial
capital based sugar production and plantation slavery. In New
York, his research has focused on archaeological studies that explore social
activism associated with social reform movements of the 19th century, including
abolition and women’s rights. Armstrong has authored numerous books,
monographs, articles, chapters, and formal reports.

Stuart
Rosenthal, Professor and Chair, Economics

Stuart S. Rosenthal is a Maxwell Advisory Board Professor of
Economics and a Senior Research Associate in Maxwell’s Center for Policy
Research. He holds a PhD in economics from the University of Wisconsin-Madison
and a BA in economics from Bowdoin College. Before joining Syracuse University
in 1999, Professor Rosenthal held positions at Virginia Tech University, the
University of British Columbia, and the Board of Governors of the Federal
Reserve System. His research is in the area of urban economics, real estate finance
and housing, and state and local public economics. This includes work on a wide
range of housing and mortgage issues, the determinants of urban renewal and
decay, the influence of agglomeration on productivity, and entrepreneurship.
Rosenthal serves on the editorial boards for a number of academic journals.
Since 2007, Professor Rosenthal has been serving (with William Strange) as managing
editor of the Journal of Urban Economics.
His work has appeared in leading journals including the American Economic Review, Review
of Economics and Statistics, Journal
of Urban Economics, and Real Estate
Economics. In 2013, Professor Rosenthal received the RSAI Walter Isard
Award for Scholarly Achievement.

Norman
Kutcher, Associate Professor and Chair, History

Norman Kutcher is a Laura J. and L. Douglas Meredith Professor
for Teaching Excellence at the Maxwell School. He holds a JD from Boston
College and a PhD from Yale. His specialties include the cultural, social, and
intellectual history of late imperial China. He has written two books, Mourning in Late Imperial China: Filial Piety and the State first
published in 1999, and a forthcoming one called Emperor and Eunuch in the Great Age of Qing Rule. He has written
numerous articles and has advised recent PhD students. Professor Kutcher’s
research interests include late Imperial China, the Imperial Household in the Qing
dynasty, eunuchs, and the Yuanming Yuan, or Old Summer Palace. He was also a Fellow
at the National Humanities Center and a member of the Institute for Advanced
Study in Princeton.

Matthew R. Cleary is an associate professor of political science
at Maxwell and a Robert D. McClure Professor of Teaching Excellence. He earned
a PhD from the University of Chicago in 2004 and specializes in Latin American
politics, political institutions, democratization, and ethnic politics. Among
his recent publications are “Confronting Coup Risk in the Latin American Left,”
(with Eric Rittinger) in Studies in
Comparative International Development (2013) and The Sources of Democratic Responsiveness in Mexico (2010). He is
currently working on a variety of research projects relevant to Latin American
politics, including a book-length project on indigenous autonomy in southern
Mexico, and a paper on the adoption of legislative gender quotas in Europe and
Latin America.

Brian
Taylor, Professor and Chair, Political Science

Brian Taylor is a professor of political science at Maxwell.
He holds a PhD from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, obtained in
1998. Taylor has authored three books, The Code of Putinism (forthcoming 2018), State Building in Putin's Russia:
Policing and Coercion After Communism (2011),
and Politics and the Russian Army: Civil-Military Relations, 1689-2000 (2003) as well as multiple
articles and book chapters. Postdoctoral awards include being named a Carnegie
Scholar and a Fulbright Scholar. His
research focuses on the role of state coercive organizations, such as the
military and the police, in domestic politics. His geographic area of
specialization is Russia and the post-Soviet region.

Andrew London is the associate dean for finance and administration,
professor of sociology, and a Tenth Decade Faculty Scholar, as well as the interim
chair of the Social Science Program. He
is also a faculty associate of the Aging Studies Institute and a faculty affiliate
of the Center for Policy Research. He received a PhD in sociology and demography
for the University of Pennsylvania in 1993.
Prior to coming to Syracuse University in 2002, he was a National
Institute of Mental Health Postdoctoral Fellow at UCLA and an assistant to associate
professor of sociology at Kent State University. At Syracuse University, he was chair of Sociology
for seven years and founding co-director of the interdisciplinary LGBT Studies
Program for six years. In 2015, he
received the Excellence in Graduate Education Faculty Recognition Award. London
has published more than 80 peer-reviewed journal articles and book chapters,
and has co-edited two books. His research focuses on the health, care, and
well-being of the stigmatized and vulnerable, including persons living with
HIV/AIDS, caregivers, welfare-reliant and working poor women and their children,
LGBT-identified persons, persons with disabilities, the formerly incarcerated,
older adults, and veterans. In his research, teaching, and advocacy work, he is
particularly concerned with how social factors, policies, programs, and
institutions can mitigate or exacerbate vulnerability, disadvantage, and social
exclusion across the life course.

Prema
Kurien, Professor and Chair, Sociology

Prema Kurien is the founding director of the interdisciplinary
Asian/Asian American Studies program at Syracuse University. She was a Dr.
Thomas Tam Visiting Professor in 2014-2015 at CUNY. She obtained a PhD degree
in 1993 from Brown University. Her recent research focuses on race and ethnic
group relations, as well as the role of religion in shaping group formation and
mobilization among contemporary ethnic groups. She also focuses on the ways in
which religion becomes the axis around which such groups mobilize to challenge
racial discrimination and to make claims regarding their “cultural
citizenship.” She has received postdoctoral fellowships and grants from the
National Science Foundation, the Woodrow Wilson International Center, the
Carnegie Corporation, the Society for the Scientific Study of Religion, the Pew
Charitable Trusts, the Center for the Study of Religion at Princeton
University, the American Institute of Indian Studies, the Louisville Institute,
and the New Ethnic and Immigrant Congregations Project. Kurien’s work has been
recognized with a Contribution to the Field award in 2014 by the Asian and
Asian American section of the American Sociological Association, two national
book awards for her works (A Place at the
Multicultural Table in 2009 and Kaleidoscopic
Ethnicity in 2003), and three national article awards. Her third and most
recent book, Ethnic Church meets Mega
Church: Indian American Christianity in Motion, was published in June 2017.